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Combating Fake News, Sources - Coggle Diagram
Combating Fake News
Fake News
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-Misleading content
-Imposter content
-manipulated content
-False connection
-Satire & Parody
-News fabrication
-Advertising & Propaganda
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Challenges
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Library challenges
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Collection policies
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Outsourcing collection development to vendors = less hands-on quality control of content by library staff
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Competing approaches when dealing with collections: Combating disinformation or censorship of materials
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Collections
Managing past decisions
Historical (mis)information: keep, contextualize or remove
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Debunking (Reactive)
Tools and Resources
Web based sources:
(Google scholar, JSTOR, Emerald, Taylor & Francis, SAGE journals, ERIC)
Fact Checking websites
(Factcheck, PolitiFact, Snopes, Washington Post Factchecker)
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Sources
Johnston, N. (2023). The Impact and Management of Mis/Disinformation at University Libraries in Australia. Journal of the Australian Library and Information Association, 72(3), 251–269. https://doi.org/10.1080/24750158.2023.2235646
De Paor, S., & Heravi, B. (2020). Information literacy and fake news: How the field of librarianship can help combat the epidemic of fake news. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 46(5), 102218. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2020.102218
Hameleers, M. (2024). The state of the art in combating mis- and disinformation: lessons from pre- and de-bunking approaches. In: D. Frau-Meigs & N. Corbu (Eds.). Disinformation debunked : building resilience through media and information literacy, pp. 19 – 36. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003387404